It says Roland van Hauwermeiren was investigated by the charity, Merlin, after it was alleged that he used prostitutes in Liberia in 2004. Merlin later joined a separate charity, Save The Children, which says it doesn't have access to Merlin's records.

According to the Daily Mail, Oxfam is facing a "devastating backlash" over the scandal, as sponsors, celebrities and donors review their relationship with the charity. The paper's editorial says questions are also piling up for the watchdogs which "failed to bark" such as the Charity Commission and the Department for International Development.

The Daily Telegraph highlights a red line that Boris Johnson will draw in his Brexit speech on Wednesday. It says the foreign secretary will warn it would be "intolerable" for laws to be imposed on the UK by Brussels after it leaves the EU.

The paper's editorial thinks the speech will offer Mr Johnson the chance to set a liberal tone for the next stage of Brexit, as he outlines "inspiring consequences of genuine political sovereignty".

A police mugshot of the former youth football coach, Barry Bennell, stares out from the front of the Guardian, following his conviction for multiple child sex offences.

With the headline "Iraq racket costs you a packet", the Sun says an Iraqi refugee has blown the whistle on how he arranged hundreds of fake abuse claims against British soldiers serving in the Gulf.

The man describes a "claims factory" run from an office in Basra where false accusations would be made in a bid to win compensation from the Ministry of Defence. He goes on to blame the British legal system for the scam "for making it so easy".

Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson has told the paper he is "repulsed" by the revelations.

Times tables return

Plans to introduce mandatory times tables tests for eight-year-olds are highlighted by several papers, including the Telegraph, which sees the policy as a return to a more traditional approach to education.

According to the Daily Mail, the tests will take no longer than five minutes, and results will not be published or count towards government performance tables. But that's not appeased head teachers, who have told The Daily Mirror that children's' primary school years are "already cluttered" with tests and checks.

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If you think the romance of Valentine's Day is dead, NHS statistics suggest otherwise. The Times is one of several papers to report that conceptions this week will be 5% higher than the rest of the year, meaning the NHS sees a "baby boom" nine months after Valentine's Day.

However, the paper suggests that such passions "may take their toll" as by the end of February "conceptions reach an annual low".

Lego MP

Images on the site depict the government whip in Lego form, dealing with issues around his Pudsey constituency. One shows his plastic figure "protecting the green belt", as it stands with an army of Star Wars storm troopers in front of a large, brass-buckled green belt.